Lexis Rex Startseite





Englischer Satz-Analysierer

Benutzen Sie diese Seite, um englische Texte zu analysieren und zu lernen. Fügen Sie dazu entweder einen Text in das untenstehende Feld ein oder rufen Sie einen zufälligen Satz aus unserer Datenbank auf. Klicken Sie anschließend auf den "Analysieren"-Button, um die Übersetzung des Textes und der Vokabeln anzuzeigen.




a
     Artikel:
     [1] unbestimmter Artikel: ein, eine, einen
          [1] I can see a car and a plane.
            Ich kann ein Auto und ein Flugzeug sehen.
          [1] Yesterday we met an Afro-Carribean.
            Gestern haben wir einen Afro-Kariben getroffen.
negative
     negativ
or
     Konjunktion:
     [1] koordinierend: oder
foreboding
     Partizip I:
     Partizip Präsens (present participle) des Verbs 'forebode'
     forebode
aspect
     Aspekt
of
something
     Pronomen:
     [1] etwas; ein Ding, das unbestimmt oder unbekannt ist
          [1] Could you give me something to drink?
            Könnten Sie mir etwas zu trinken geben?
          [1] I have something for you in my bag.‎
            Ich habe etwas für dich in meiner Tasche.
positive
see
     [1] mit den Augen wahrnehmen; sehen, erkennen
          [1] Can you see the car over there?
            Kannst du das Auto da drüben sehen?
          [1] "A childish incident, in which, however, is seen a good-natured disposition in Tom Jones."
     Substantiv:
     [1] Religion: Sitz, Verwaltung eines Bischofs; Bischofssitz, Erzbistum
every
     Adjektiv:
     [1] jeder
          [1] „Every man dies alone.“
             Jeder stirbt für sich allein.
cloud
     Substantiv:
     [1] Wetter: eine abgegrenzte Masse aus sichtbarem Wasserdampf, welcher in der Luft schwebt
     [2] ein Masse (große Menge) von Rauch, Staub, Sand die in der Luft schwebt
     [3] eine große Anzahl von Insekten, die zusammen durch die Luft fliegen
     [4] optischer Fehler innerhalb einer durchsichtigen Masse
     [5] etwas, das ein Grund ist für Unglücklichsein oder auch Ungewissheit
          [1] Black clouds appeared from the west.
            Schwarze Wolken zogen von Westen auf.
has
     Konjugierte Form:
     3. Person Singular Indikativ Präsens Aktiv des Verbs 'have'
     have
          transitiv:
            [1] haben; besitzen; zur Verfügung haben
            [2] erfahren, erleben
            [3] (eine Sprache, ein Fach) kennen, können
            [4] betont, oft passiv; umgangssprachlich: (jemanden) betrugen
            [5] salopp: (jemanden) ficken
            mit Mittelwörtern der Vergangenheit:
              [6] erleiden, erfahren (unfreiwillig etwas Schlechtes erfahren): someone had [object] [past participle] = jemandem wurde [das Objekt] [Partizip Perfekt] (siehe die Beispiele)
              [7] machen, dass etwas geschieht; veranlassen, dass jemand etwas tut; lassen: someone had [object] [past participle] = jemand lässt/ließ [das Objekt] [Infinitiv] (siehe die Beispiele)
            [8] nur aktiv, mit einem Infinitiv ohne to: veranlassen (befehlen oder bitten), dass jemand etwas tut: someone had [object] [infinitive] = jemand hat [Objekt] dazu gezwungen, zu [Infinitiv]
            [9] veranstalten
            [10] nur aktiv: essen, trinken
            [11] hauptsächlich aktiv: haben, (eine Eigenschaft wie Gnade oder Frechheit) durch Taten zeigen
            [12] nur aktiv: (ein Kind) gebären
            [13] nur aktiv: in einer bestimmten Lage oder Haltung halten
            [14] mit nachfolgendem to (und entweder einem Verb oder nichts): müssen
          Hilfsverb:
            [15] zur Bildung des Perfekts [15a] (present perfect), des Plusquamperfekts [15b] (past perfect) und des Perfektfuturs [15c] (future perfect)
            [16] zur Bildung des (periphrastischen) Vergangenheitskonjunktivs
          intransitiv:
            [17] selten, gehoben: Reichtum haben
               [1] I have a garden and a huge house.
                 Ich habe einen Garten und ein großes Haus.
               [1] I have two children.
                 Ich habe zwei Kinder.
               [1] You have thirty seconds to explain why you're here.
               [1] We don't have time to stay.
               [2] I had a good time.
                 Ich habe mich gut unterhalten.
               [2] I have a headache.
                 Ich habe Kopfschmerzen.
               [2] We almost had an accident on our way over.
               [3] Only I had failed to mention that Mitterand did not speak English. And Reagan has only a little French. An interpreter should have been called in.
               [4] He's just having you (on)!
               [4] I was had! / I've been had!
               [5] He brags about how many women he has had.
               [6] He had his car stolen.
                 Ihm wurde das Auto gestohlen.
               [7] He had his hair cut.
                 Er ließ sich die Haare schneiden.
               [8] Julian had me feed his cats while he was on vacation.
               [8] The police had the suspect put his hands up.
               [9] Michaela is having a party next weekend.
               [9] The candidates are having a debate next weekend.
               [9] My favourite bands are having a show next weekend.
               [10] I had a hamburger yesterday, so I'm having a salad today.
               [10] What did you have for breakfast?
               [10] We have dinner at 6 o'clock.
               [11] May God have mercy on your soul.
               [11] And now you have the nerve to say that?
                 Und jetzt hast du die Frechheit, das zu sagen?
               [12] She had her first child at age twenty.
               [12] The couple couldn't have children, so they adopted.
               [12] She's in the hospital having a baby!
               [13] I had her trapped. (She was trapped.)
               [13] I had the coins in a bag.
               [13] He had his back to them when they walked in, so they didn't recognise him at first.
               [14] We have to go.
                 Wir müssen gehen.
               [14] I didn't want to go, but my parents said I had to.
               [14] You don't have to do this! There has to be another way!
               [15] When she had finished her meal, she phoned her mother.
                 Als sie gegessen hatte, rief sie ihre Mutter an.
               [15a] I have read the book.
               [15b] He had read the book already.
               [15c] She will have read the book by the time the book club meets.
               [16] Had I known you were sick, I would have come. / If I had known you were sick, I would have come.
               [17] Some have; others have not.
a
     Artikel:
     [1] unbestimmter Artikel: ein, eine, einen
          [1] I can see a car and a plane.
            Ich kann ein Auto und ein Flugzeug sehen.
          [1] Yesterday we met an Afro-Carribean.
            Gestern haben wir einen Afro-Kariben getroffen.
silver
     Substantiv:
     [1] Chemie: Silber
lining
     Partizip I:
     Partizip Präsens (present participle) des Verbs 'line'
     line
          Substantiv:
          [1] ursprünglich: Schnur, Faden: lange, relativ dünne Textilie
          [2]
            [a] allgemein: Linie: (gerade oder gebogene) Verbindung oder Weg zwischen zwei oder mehreren Punkten
            [b] Geometrie: Linie: gerader, eindimensionaler Körper, der unendlich lang und unendlich dünn ist
            [c] Geometrie, umgangssprachlich: Strecke, beidseitig begrenzte gerade Linie (2b)
          [3]
            [a] Meridian, Längengrad, Breitengrad
            [b] häufig großgeschrieben (the Line): der Äquator, der Erdäquator
          [4] Richtung, Weg
          [5] Fernmeldewesen: Leitung
          [6]
            [a] Zeile: geschriebene oder gedruckte Zeile (Reihe) von Buchstaben, Wörtern, Zahlen oder Zeichen, oder eine Leere anstelle solches Textes
            [b] gesprochener Satz
            [c] Spruch, Platte, Geschwätz
          [7] Schlange (Reihe von Individuen oder Gegenständen)
               [1] Then we hunted up a place close by to hide the canoe in, amongst the thick willows. We took some fish off of the lines and set them again, and begun to get ready for dinner.
               [1] Use fabric or nursery grade webbing around stakes and trunk, loosely tying the line to the tree about 6 inches below the point where the tree bounces back in your hand when you grab the trunk.
               [2a–c] That is a straight line.
                 Das ist eine gerade Linie.
               [2a] The letter S is drawn with one line, the letter H with three.
               [2a] The atmosphere in flaming sparkles flew; / And where the burning wheels / Eddied above the mountain’s loftiest peak / Was traced a line of lightning.
               [2b] Euclid defined a line as a breadthless length.
               [2c] The line between point A and point B was 2cm long.
               [3b] She was somewhere to the northward of the Line.
          Substantiv:
          [1] Leinen, Linnen; Lein
               [1] They brought garments made of line.
          Verb:
          [1] die Innenseite (einer Sache) bedecken, füttern (mit einem Futter versehen)
               [1] The tailor lined the cloak with silk.
               [1] The bird lined its nest with pine needles.
          Verb:
          [1] veraltet, von einem Hund: (eine Hündin) begatten
               [1] Bedlamite was a black dog, and although it may be safely asserted that he lined upwards of 100 bitches of all colours, red, white, and blue, all his produce were black.
               [1] A bitch lined by a mangy dog is very liable to produce mangy puppies, and the progeny of a mangy bitch is certain to become affected some time or other.
               [1] Pliny states that the inhabitants of India take pleasure in having their dog bitches lined by the wild tigers, and to facilitate this union, they are in the habit of tieing them when in heat out in the woods, so that the male tigers may visit them.
or
     Konjunktion:
     [1] koordinierend: oder
every
     Adjektiv:
     [1] jeder
          [1] „Every man dies alone.“
             Jeder stirbt für sich allein.
silver
     Substantiv:
     [1] Chemie: Silber
lining
     Partizip I:
     Partizip Präsens (present participle) des Verbs 'line'
     line
          Substantiv:
          [1] ursprünglich: Schnur, Faden: lange, relativ dünne Textilie
          [2]
            [a] allgemein: Linie: (gerade oder gebogene) Verbindung oder Weg zwischen zwei oder mehreren Punkten
            [b] Geometrie: Linie: gerader, eindimensionaler Körper, der unendlich lang und unendlich dünn ist
            [c] Geometrie, umgangssprachlich: Strecke, beidseitig begrenzte gerade Linie (2b)
          [3]
            [a] Meridian, Längengrad, Breitengrad
            [b] häufig großgeschrieben (the Line): der Äquator, der Erdäquator
          [4] Richtung, Weg
          [5] Fernmeldewesen: Leitung
          [6]
            [a] Zeile: geschriebene oder gedruckte Zeile (Reihe) von Buchstaben, Wörtern, Zahlen oder Zeichen, oder eine Leere anstelle solches Textes
            [b] gesprochener Satz
            [c] Spruch, Platte, Geschwätz
          [7] Schlange (Reihe von Individuen oder Gegenständen)
               [1] Then we hunted up a place close by to hide the canoe in, amongst the thick willows. We took some fish off of the lines and set them again, and begun to get ready for dinner.
               [1] Use fabric or nursery grade webbing around stakes and trunk, loosely tying the line to the tree about 6 inches below the point where the tree bounces back in your hand when you grab the trunk.
               [2a–c] That is a straight line.
                 Das ist eine gerade Linie.
               [2a] The letter S is drawn with one line, the letter H with three.
               [2a] The atmosphere in flaming sparkles flew; / And where the burning wheels / Eddied above the mountain’s loftiest peak / Was traced a line of lightning.
               [2b] Euclid defined a line as a breadthless length.
               [2c] The line between point A and point B was 2cm long.
               [3b] She was somewhere to the northward of the Line.
          Substantiv:
          [1] Leinen, Linnen; Lein
               [1] They brought garments made of line.
          Verb:
          [1] die Innenseite (einer Sache) bedecken, füttern (mit einem Futter versehen)
               [1] The tailor lined the cloak with silk.
               [1] The bird lined its nest with pine needles.
          Verb:
          [1] veraltet, von einem Hund: (eine Hündin) begatten
               [1] Bedlamite was a black dog, and although it may be safely asserted that he lined upwards of 100 bitches of all colours, red, white, and blue, all his produce were black.
               [1] A bitch lined by a mangy dog is very liable to produce mangy puppies, and the progeny of a mangy bitch is certain to become affected some time or other.
               [1] Pliny states that the inhabitants of India take pleasure in having their dog bitches lined by the wild tigers, and to facilitate this union, they are in the habit of tieing them when in heat out in the woods, so that the male tigers may visit them.
has
     Konjugierte Form:
     3. Person Singular Indikativ Präsens Aktiv des Verbs 'have'
     have
          transitiv:
            [1] haben; besitzen; zur Verfügung haben
            [2] erfahren, erleben
            [3] (eine Sprache, ein Fach) kennen, können
            [4] betont, oft passiv; umgangssprachlich: (jemanden) betrugen
            [5] salopp: (jemanden) ficken
            mit Mittelwörtern der Vergangenheit:
              [6] erleiden, erfahren (unfreiwillig etwas Schlechtes erfahren): someone had [object] [past participle] = jemandem wurde [das Objekt] [Partizip Perfekt] (siehe die Beispiele)
              [7] machen, dass etwas geschieht; veranlassen, dass jemand etwas tut; lassen: someone had [object] [past participle] = jemand lässt/ließ [das Objekt] [Infinitiv] (siehe die Beispiele)
            [8] nur aktiv, mit einem Infinitiv ohne to: veranlassen (befehlen oder bitten), dass jemand etwas tut: someone had [object] [infinitive] = jemand hat [Objekt] dazu gezwungen, zu [Infinitiv]
            [9] veranstalten
            [10] nur aktiv: essen, trinken
            [11] hauptsächlich aktiv: haben, (eine Eigenschaft wie Gnade oder Frechheit) durch Taten zeigen
            [12] nur aktiv: (ein Kind) gebären
            [13] nur aktiv: in einer bestimmten Lage oder Haltung halten
            [14] mit nachfolgendem to (und entweder einem Verb oder nichts): müssen
          Hilfsverb:
            [15] zur Bildung des Perfekts [15a] (present perfect), des Plusquamperfekts [15b] (past perfect) und des Perfektfuturs [15c] (future perfect)
            [16] zur Bildung des (periphrastischen) Vergangenheitskonjunktivs
          intransitiv:
            [17] selten, gehoben: Reichtum haben
               [1] I have a garden and a huge house.
                 Ich habe einen Garten und ein großes Haus.
               [1] I have two children.
                 Ich habe zwei Kinder.
               [1] You have thirty seconds to explain why you're here.
               [1] We don't have time to stay.
               [2] I had a good time.
                 Ich habe mich gut unterhalten.
               [2] I have a headache.
                 Ich habe Kopfschmerzen.
               [2] We almost had an accident on our way over.
               [3] Only I had failed to mention that Mitterand did not speak English. And Reagan has only a little French. An interpreter should have been called in.
               [4] He's just having you (on)!
               [4] I was had! / I've been had!
               [5] He brags about how many women he has had.
               [6] He had his car stolen.
                 Ihm wurde das Auto gestohlen.
               [7] He had his hair cut.
                 Er ließ sich die Haare schneiden.
               [8] Julian had me feed his cats while he was on vacation.
               [8] The police had the suspect put his hands up.
               [9] Michaela is having a party next weekend.
               [9] The candidates are having a debate next weekend.
               [9] My favourite bands are having a show next weekend.
               [10] I had a hamburger yesterday, so I'm having a salad today.
               [10] What did you have for breakfast?
               [10] We have dinner at 6 o'clock.
               [11] May God have mercy on your soul.
               [11] And now you have the nerve to say that?
                 Und jetzt hast du die Frechheit, das zu sagen?
               [12] She had her first child at age twenty.
               [12] The couple couldn't have children, so they adopted.
               [12] She's in the hospital having a baby!
               [13] I had her trapped. (She was trapped.)
               [13] I had the coins in a bag.
               [13] He had his back to them when they walked in, so they didn't recognise him at first.
               [14] We have to go.
                 Wir müssen gehen.
               [14] I didn't want to go, but my parents said I had to.
               [14] You don't have to do this! There has to be another way!
               [15] When she had finished her meal, she phoned her mother.
                 Als sie gegessen hatte, rief sie ihre Mutter an.
               [15a] I have read the book.
               [15b] He had read the book already.
               [15c] She will have read the book by the time the book club meets.
               [16] Had I known you were sick, I would have come. / If I had known you were sick, I would have come.
               [17] Some have; others have not.
a
     Artikel:
     [1] unbestimmter Artikel: ein, eine, einen
          [1] I can see a car and a plane.
            Ich kann ein Auto und ein Flugzeug sehen.
          [1] Yesterday we met an Afro-Carribean.
            Gestern haben wir einen Afro-Kariben getroffen.
cloud
     Substantiv:
     [1] Wetter: eine abgegrenzte Masse aus sichtbarem Wasserdampf, welcher in der Luft schwebt
     [2] ein Masse (große Menge) von Rauch, Staub, Sand die in der Luft schwebt
     [3] eine große Anzahl von Insekten, die zusammen durch die Luft fliegen
     [4] optischer Fehler innerhalb einer durchsichtigen Masse
     [5] etwas, das ein Grund ist für Unglücklichsein oder auch Ungewissheit
          [1] Black clouds appeared from the west.
            Schwarze Wolken zogen von Westen auf.
Wörterbuch-Einträge aus Wiktionary